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SK Hynix is raising $29 billion it doesn't need in the middle of a chip sector selloff.

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Jul 8, 2026 · 17:00

SK Hynix is planning a Nasdaq listing this week, right in the middle of this selloff, even though it doesn't actually need the money. The offering could raise up to $28-29 billion, which would make it the second-largest U.S. share sale in history, with trading set to begin Friday, July 10. This is happening right as the Samsung-triggered chip selloff has already dragged down Micron, SanDisk, Western Digital, and the rest of the memory sector this week.

SK Hynix is already profitable, its HBM chips (the memory type used in AI servers) are in a severe shortage, and it's sitting on over 35 trillion won in net cash. One analysis pointed out SK Hynix could easily borrow cheaply against its own cash flow instead of selling new shares. When a company that doesn't need capital and it still goes out of its way to raise a record amount of it, I think it's testing the market.

Last month, SK Hynix simply said it might slow its AI memory expansion, and that comment alone triggered one of the Korean stock market's worst single-day drops on record, with the ripple effects hitting global indices. Analysts at Capital Economics flagged that kind of violent single-comment reaction as the sort of volatility that's historically only shown up during real bear markets, the dot-com bubble, the Asian financial crisis, the 2008 crash.

Despite all that, the offering has reportedly been oversubscribed multiple times already. So there's a real tension here, on one hand, a comment about slowing expansion nearly tanked the Kospi last month and the sector's having a rough week right now because of Samsung. On the other hand, institutional demand for this specific listing looks genuinely strong and not distressed at all.

If a company that explicitly doesn't need the cash can still raise nearly $30 billion smoothly during an active sector selloff, that's a pretty strong signal real institutional money still believes in the memory/AI infrastructure story despite this week's headlines. How it performs after the listing will tell a lot more about whether investors are willing to pay a good price for the shares or the early buyers didn't have faith and quickly sold once trading opened.

Does an oversubscribed raise landing mid-selloff feel like real conviction or maybe a company which didn't need cash is adding $29 billion of new supply into a nervous market at the wrong time. It feels like Friday's open will tell you more about how the market feels about AI trade than anything Samsung or Micron reported this week.